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McMillion Letter to the NY Times editor |
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Written by LNC
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Monday, 10 November 2008 |
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Charles McMillion responded to Robert Rubin's and Jared Bernstein's op-ed published last week in the NY Times. Rubin needs no introduction. Bernstein is with the Economic Policy Institute. The original op-ed is here.
To the Editors of the NYTs:
Still singing nostalgic tunes, Robert Rubin and Jared Bernstein ignore todays key reality in their plea for No More Economic False Choices. (Nov. 3)
Certainly, recent extremes of fiscal recklessness and unregulated global financial and product markets failed utterly and their polar opposites would be just as disastrous.
But on the key issue of global commerce, Rubin and Bernstein offer no choice but to continue extreme unregulated free trade patterns that have bankrupted the US auto industry, outsourced much of the electronics industry and forced $5 Trillion in foreign borrowing and asset sales (and Wall Street fees!) in just the last eight years.
Their rhetoric about retraining to spread the wealth that these massive job, income and tax losses create is a cruel and tired ideological joke.
Failed bets on infinite asset appreciation is the one-trick pony that inevitably wrecked the US economy (and Citigroup) after baseless stock market and housing bubbles gave the brief illusion of general prosperity.
Assuring US production in a fiercely competitive global economy is the most urgent challenge facing the new Administration.
Sincerely,
Charles W. McMillion
Dr. McMillion is the President and Chief Economist for MBG Information Services in Washington, DC.
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In the news
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The following, written by Professor Ralph Gomory of New York University's Stern School of Business and former President of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, appeared in the Huffington Post on December 16, 2008 and can be accessed here.
Autopia: A Tale of Two Bailouts
Many Americans are struggling to understand how our government makes decisions on corporate bailouts. When Wall Street companies spent years investing in mortgages that turned out, essentially, to be garbage, the government rushed to bail them out. But when the auto companies neared a similar fate, the government was prepared to stand by and let them perish.
To aid in understanding this situation, it is helpful to look at an example from a galaxy far, far away.
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